Grover v. Grover

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 30, 1999
Docket01A01-9804-CH-00197
StatusPublished

This text of Grover v. Grover (Grover v. Grover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grover v. Grover, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE

BRUCE FREEMAN GROVER, JR., ) FILED ) April 30, 1999 Plaintiff/Appellee- ) Williamson Chancery No. 24827 Cross/Appellant, ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. ) Appellate Court Clerk v. ) ) Appeal No. 01A01-9804-CH-00197 SHARON DIANE GROVER, ) ) Defendant/Appellant- ) Cross/Appellee. )

APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY AT FRANKLIN, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE TIMOTHY EASTER, JUDGE

For the Plaintiff/Appellee- For the Defendant/Appellant- Cross/Appellant: Cross/Appellee:

Russ Heldman Robert H. Plummer, Jr. Ernie Williams Franklin, Tennessee Franklin, Tennessee

AFFIRMED AND REMANDED

HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J.

CONCURS:

BEN H. CANTRELL, J.

WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., J. OPINION

This is a child custody case. The trial court awarded custody of the three minor children to

the father, and ordered the mother to pay child support. The mother appeals. We affirm and remand.

Plaintiff/Appellee, Bruce Freeman Grover (“Husband”), and Defendant/Appellant, Sharon

Diane Grover (“Wife”), were married in 1979. Three children were born during the eighteen and

one-half year marriage. At the time of trial, Cassie was fourteen, Christina (“Chrissy”) was eleven,

and Chase was nine. On July 23, 1997, Husband filed for divorce from Wife, citing irreconcilable

differences and inappropriate marital conduct. Wife filed a counter-complaint for divorce. Both

parties sought custody of the three minor children.

For several years preceding their separation, the parties had lived with the children in a four

bedroom trailer located on land owned by Wife’s father, Tom Locke (“Locke”). Prior to the parties’

separation, Wife was the primary caretaker of the children. Wife moved out of the trailer in June

1997. Since then, the children have continued to reside in the trailer with Husband, and he has been

the primary caretaker of the children. The trailer is within walking distance of the Locke residence.

The children spend considerable time in the home or in the care of Locke and his wife, Wife’s

stepmother, as they have since they began residing in the trailer. Locke and his wife help Husband

with the care of the children, before work and at other times when needed.

After Wife moved out of the marital home, Husband obtained a temporary restraining order

“restraining and prohibiting [Wife] from removing and/or attempting to remove the minor children

from the physical possession of [Husband] and/or [Wife’s] father, pending further proceedings in

this cause.” Locke, Wife’s father, also obtained a restraining order against Wife, which prevented

her from coming on to his property.

Both parties have a checkered past. Approximately nine years ago, both Husband and Wife

were convicted of the sale of cocaine. As a result, they were both placed on lengthy probation.

Husband has never been convicted of violating his probation, but admits that warrants were served

on him on a few occasions. Wife has one probation violation for a positive drug test for marijuana.

On August 15, 1997, the parties entered into an agreed order providing that Husband and

Locke would share joint custody of the children until a later hearing. At the time of the agreed order,

both parties had tested positive on a drug screen. Joint custody with Wife’s father was agreed on to

protect the children in the event that both parties were incarcerated. In a second agreed order dated

December 8, 1997, the parties agreed that Wife would pay $145 per week in child support pending the final hearing set for January 12, 1998. Wife paid these amounts until January 12, 1998, but failed

to pay child support from January 12, 1998 to February 11, 1998 when the hearing was rescheduled.

Husband is currently employed as an assistant grocery store manager. His shift starts anytime

from 2:00 a.m. to 6:00 a.m., which prevents him from caring for the children before school. He

testified that since he started working those hours, he has received help in getting the children ready

for school from his mother or his in-laws. He is usually off work by 3:00 p.m.

Husband testified at trial that his oldest daughter, Cassie, is estranged from her mother and

chooses not to visit with her mother. He stated that the parties’ second oldest daughter, Chrissy,

does not wish to visit with her mother but feels compelled to because she believes that she would

be arrested if she did not. Husband testified about his everyday involvement in the children’s lives,

such as driving them to after-school activities, coaching his son’s sports teams, and eating lunch at

school with each child at least once every week. He enrolled the children in counseling for divorced

children at their respective schools. Husband claimed that Wife was not helping him with any of the

children’s expenses, and that she was not paying child support.

Husband admitted that, about two years before the divorce, he moved out of the marital home

and lived with another woman for several months. Husband claimed that he gave Wife money for

the children’s expenses during the separation, which Wife disputes. During this time, Husband

claimed that he learned that Wife was also having an affair.

Wife is currently employed at Kroger as a head clerk. She currently lives in a house with her

boyfriend and another male roommate. Wife testified that she moved out of the marital residence

after she was assaulted by Husband, resulting in a bruised lumbar and an injury to her elbow. She

alleged that, when she came home from work one day, Husband awoke and became angry with her

about the keys to his truck. He then pulled her by her ankles off the couch where she had been sitting

and threw her purse at her. This assault was not prosecuted. When she returned the following day

to pick up the children, she found that her father had obtained a restraining order prohibiting her

from coming onto his property. Wife testified that when Husband moved out of the marital home

for several months, she had just been diagnosed with Crohn’s disease, a disease affecting the

intestines. She denied that Husband made payments to her for the children’s care during that time.

She testified that she did not begin seeing the man with whom she currently resides until Husband

moved out of the marital residence. She stated that she stopped this extramarital relationship when

2 Husband returned to the marital home and that it did not resume until June 1997 when she asked

Husband for a divorce.

Wife testified that, prior to the parties’ final separation, she was the primary caretaker of the

children, and that she prepared them for school and fixed their lunches. She stated that, since the

separation, she has been involved in the children’s activities and has attended a dance, football and

baseball games, and has visited Chase’s school and counselor.

Wife also testified, that after she acquired a lawyer to set up visitation, she has never missed

a visitation with the children. On several occasions Chase, by choice, stayed longer with Wife than

the usual weekend visitation schedule allowed. Wife explained that Chrissy may have developed

the idea that she would be arrested if she did not visit with her mother from an occasion on which

Chrissy was at her grandfather’s house and refused to go with her mother for visitation. Wife

admitted that she told her father, in Chrissy’s presence, that the court had ordered visitation for her

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